TELUS Samsung Galaxy S II X Review (Video)

It is likely not a coincidence that the Samsung Galaxy S II X is debuting on Telus mere weeks before the debut of a new iPhone. Its most stately device since the massive HTC Desire HD, the carrier has lacked “superphones” and released devices meant for the back-to-school mainstream consumer segment.

While there is nothing inherently wrong with that strategy, it lead to a six-month space where Rogers and especially Bell were offering superior, albeit more expensive, Android phones. As its competitors used words like dual-core and qHD, focusing on speed, size and might, Telus offered the HTC Status with Facebook integration and the LG Optimus Black with built-in Skype support.

The Samsung Hercules was rumoured for many months to be an American variant of the Samsung Galaxy S II, and has since been confirmed for T-Mobile. When the photos leaked showing it was coming to Telus, Android fans and spurned Telus customers alike shouted for joy.

While it resembles Bell’s Galaxy S II in many ways, there are several aesthetic and internal changes that differentiate, and improve upon, the original.

The SGS2X, as it will henceforth be named, is slightly wider and thicker than the original. The screen size has been increased to 4.52” from 4.3” but maintains the beautiful, paper-like sharpness that Super AMOLED Plus offers. The resolution stays the same, too, meaning that icons are almost comically oversized, especially if you are coming from an Android device with the same resolution but a smaller screen, like the HTC Desire. You’d think, though, that text at such a size would be blurry, but is in fact extremely sharp, even if the individual letters are bigger than average.

The body is wider than the Galaxy S II, owing more of its lineage to the original i9000 model that Bell released in summer 2010. This time, though, Samsung didn’t skimp on the quality of materials: compared to the Bell Galaxy S II, the SGS2X is robust despite being entirely made of plastic. Its chrome bezel is a bit garish, and a fingerprint magnet, but it’s the sturdy spine that we so longed for in previous models. Because the bezel is rounded and thicker, it is more comfortable to hold for long periods of time, especially for phone calls.

The back of the device is stunning. Simply put, Samsung has designed one of the most attractive battery covers we’ve ever used. While it maintains the textured backing of the SGS2, the X’s pattern is smaller and closer together; it resembles leather, but feels like high quality rubber. Like all Galaxy S variants, the bottom curves out slightly, but this one is more subtle and elegant.

Due to the large size of the display, the device feels right in both portrait and landscape mode. We found the landscape keyboard just the right balance of width and height to type on without mistake or interruption. The body is 135g all told, some 19g heavier than the SGS2, but the extra weight is distributed well, and instead of feeling heavy, we’d argue the original feels light.

The Display

There is no question that Samsung still holds the crown in terms of display quality. The extra .22 inches certainly brushes against the edge of WVGA fidelity, and we’d have loved to see a few extra pixels on this gorgeous screen, but this is still THE best on the market.

Black levels are perfect — pixels literally don’t turn on unless they’re used — while colours are vivid and, though slightly exagerrated, pleasant to look at. Even more impressive, as we noted in the original’s review, is text, which appears more like reading a piece of paper than any other device we’ve used. This trend continues on the SGS2X despite the size of each letter being slightly larger than on its predecessor.

At this point, though, we think that 4.52” is the largest one should stretch the WVGA resolution. The company just announced an HD version of the Galaxy S II LTE, with a stunning screen resolution of 1280×720, but it likely incorporates the inferior PenTile technology, so we’ll have to see how they compare.

One area that we’d like to see improved is the quality of the glass. Even though both models use Gorilla Glass to cover the screen, protecting it from scratches, we found that after several months of using a Galaxy S II as our daily driver the screen was full of tiny scratches and blemishes. We never found this with the iPhone 4, or any number of other Android devices. While we haven’t seen this issue crop up yet on the SGS2X, and hopefully it won’t, just be cautious if not using a screen protector.

Performance

So, here’s the kicker. The Samsung Galaxy S II X does not use the same processor as the original. It actually uses a Qualcomm Snapdragon MSM8660 processor, similar to the one in the HTC Sensation and Evo 3D. While this is the first Qualcomm processor we’ve seen inside a modern Samsung device, there were rumours bubbling for months hinting that the company may be using nVidia’s Tegra 2 processor.

The Snapdragon processor inside the SGS2X is clocked some 300Mhz faster than the Exynos processor in Bell’s version. However, Samsung’s home-made SoC, with its Mali400-MP GPU is known to be somewhat faster than anything on the market, and in our previous tests blew away the Sensation in synthetic benchmarks. So why the switch to Qualcomm from their admittedly faster home-made chip? It’s all about network speed. In order to reach those astronomical speeds of 42Mbps, twice what the original could pull off, Samsung had to pair the Qualcomm MDM8220 baseband chip with the MSM8660 SoC. Simple as that: there are no baseband chips compatible with the Exynos chipset right now to help achieve those dual-channel speeds, necessitating a move over to Snapdragon.

So how does this affect performance? In day to day usage, you’re unlikely to notice a difference. In fact, for single-core non-GPU applications, the SGS2X is likely to be faster merely by virtue of its 20% increase in core clock speed. As a result, we experienced a massive 627ms speed boost in the popular Sunspider Javascript benchmark, from 3316ms to 2689ms. This translated well in general browsing, too: desktop pages loaded extremely quickly and scrolled, panned and zoomed noticeably better than the SGS2.

Synthetic benchmarks didn’t fare as well. Because the SGS2X has the same graphics processing unit as the HTC Sensation and EVO 3D, albeit clocked slightly higher as well, synthetic benchmarks in which the GPU was tested failed to compete with the Bell Galaxy S II.

While Qualcomm’s own Vellamo benchmark was neck and neck, with the SGS2 beating out the SGS2X by a mere 6 points, the venerable, and notably more GPU-focused Smartbench 2011 test suite favoured the Bell GS2 by a wide margin.

Except for the Sunspider test, the Bell Galaxy S II comes out on top in every benchmark, especially when it comes to more GPU-intensive applications. That being said, the SGS2X holds its own very nicely and in real world settings even if, for some reason, it doesn’t scale as well as the Sensation at the same clock speed. (Note that the Sensation has a screen resolution of 960×540 so graphics-intensive tests must take those extra pixels into account, as tests are run at the phone’s native resolution. We included the Sensation merely for comparison purposes).

However, this brings to bear a couple things. First, that Samsung has optimized its browser for hardware acceleration (affecting the Sunspider tests); second, that Samsung has a conundrum on its hands, as a new device being marketed if not as a successor to the current Galaxy S II, at least a superior option, is inferior when it comes to sheer speed.

TouchWIZardry

The SGS2X ships with build KI3, which means it was released in the third week of September, 2011. As a result it’s running Android 2.3.5, the next-to-newest compilable version currently available, and possibly the most up-to-date code on any shipping Android product to date (except for the Nexus S and Nexus One).

In terms of differentiation from the original Galaxy S II, there is none. They both run the TouchWIZ 4 skin with its smooth, hardware-accelerated scrolling, austere aesthetic and advanced feature set. Since its release in June, we’ve come to love the simple-yet-powerful launcher.

By default there are five home screens, loaded to the brim with Samsung widgets. There’s a digital clock, a weather applet, a search bar, a news portal along with the icons to the four Samsung Hubs: Reader, Music, Games and Social. Each one represents a tie-in with a third-party company, offering various media to purchase. We appreciate that the Reader application is partly powered by the Canadian e-seller Kobo, which allows you to syncronize existing content to your device. Zinio and PressDisplay offer magazines and news, respectively.

Music is powered by 7Digital, a legitimate contender to iTunes in the digital space. They offer fairly-priced DRM-free tunes that can be downloaded to three devices, though they don’t yet offer a streaming service a la Google Music.

The Social hub consolidates Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn with your various corporate or private email accounts. It works well, and for light users will suffice as a replacement for individual applications, but we’d recommend going with the services’ respective official apps.

The only “bloatware” to speak of was a GroupOn app, which offers daily deals in your notification bar every morning. Unfortunately you are unable to delete the app, but you can manually turn off deal notifications in the Settings.

In addition to the requisite Google apps such as Gmail, Maps and YouTube we noticed an icon for Google Books on the device, even though the service is not yet offered in Canada. While you can download copyright-free content, it isn’t yet possible to purchase books, but its inclusion makes us hopeful for the future.

We liked the quick toggle icons at the top of the notification bar, and the easy way to place icons on the homescreen through an intuitive grid system that is head and shoulders above the stock Android organization method. And the myriad widgets that Samsung includes for weather, news, and social media? They’re all pretty useful, and gorgeously arrayed on the Super AMOLED screen.

In terms of built-in storage, 13GB or so is available to the user, and is divided between 2GB of application storage, while the rest is allocated as an internal SD card.

For a more in-depth roundup of the features in TouchWIZ 4, see our review of the Bell Samsung Galaxy S II.

Reception and Network Speed

Let’s go back a second to why Samsung chose to slap a third-party baseband chip in a device that could have seen a home-made part inside. To understand this reasoning, we have to take a look at the last year or so of Canadian network expansion.

As Bell and Rogers turn on their LTE networks, it’s Telus who remains the only carrier advertising speed improvements to its existing HSPA+ network. Granted, Bell and Telus share many cell towers between them, but the Galaxy S II X is the first device in Canada to support Dual Channel HSPA+, which utilizes two distinct 5Mhz channels in either the 850- or 1900Mhz spectrum. Because a single HSPA+ channel theoretically supports 21Mbps, by engaging two for a single transmit we ostensibly double our bandwidth to 42Mbps in the downlink.

We were able to see some ridiculous speeds as a result, with LTE-rivalling results of 14Mbps in the downstream and up to 3Mbps in the upstream. But raw speed has never been an issue for HSPA+ networks, at least not in practice; rather, it is high ping times which truly affect the performance of mobile products. It is not uncommon to see 300+ms ping times to a remote server, which means that it takes almost one-third of a second for that server to respond to our device and send back an acknowledgement. This may not seem like much, but every time you visit a website or initiate a data-based communication, even to a device in the hands of someone sitting next to you, high latency can drastically deteriorate overall network performance.

We noticed that in the curious, though admittedly synthetic, Speedtest.net application, higher download speeds translated into significantly higher ping times. When we achieved that result of 14Mbps, it was accompanied by a 1200ms latency time. When we achieved more reasonable results of 3Mbps download, we obtained a more reasonable 105ms ping. Dual-channel doesn’t always mean higher latency, but higher a cell-site utilization means less unobstructed bandwidth is going to be allocated per device, lowering speeds in both the up- and downstream.

In real-world browsing, the extra speed is noticeable. When launching a HD YouTube video over 4G, for instance, not only does it begin almost instantly, but we had none of the buffering hiccups so often experienced over 3G networks. And since we are utilizing two channels, the cumulative bandwidth allows for streaming while background downloading; in other words, you can be download a large file while streaming the latest Bieber album from Rdio.

Samsung has never been known for the sharpness of their earpieces, and the SGS2X continues this unfortunate tradition. While we had no issues hearing the other person under ideal circumstances, the maximum volume was too low when walking down a busy street, or when the other person spoke quietly. There is a second noise-cancelling microphone which did successfully filter out external din, the results were underwhelming when compared to the superlative earpieces on the Motorola Atrix or BlackBerry Bold 9900.

In its favour, however, was the excellent cell reception maintained by Telus’ HSPA+ network. We did get a chuckle seeing the 4G icon next to the four reception bars, but like its Galaxy S II brother, the X was a stalwart trooper, finding reception in basements, elevators and even behind concrete. And because the SGS2X comes with built-in WiFi sharing, your excellent reception can be translated into a ubiquitous hotspot.

Cameras

The Galaxy S II X comes with the same excellent camera sensor as its brother. Easily incorporating one of the best lens/sensor combos on the market, the 8MP shots that this phone takes will make you leave your point-and-shoot at home. They’re that good.

Colours are vibrant and true, while detail is phenomenal. We found that photos took a fraction of a second longer to process than the Bell version, likely due to the different way the processor renders the image, but shots are virtually instantaneous. The interface is simple and powerful, with the option to customize the left shortcut bar to your heart’s content. If you want the Flash toggle to be on the top, you can put it there; if you want the ability to change photo resolutions with one click, the option is available.

The number of customization options is astounding. There are several Shooting Modes, including face-detecting Smile Shot and red-eye reducing Beauty, while the Action Shot mode produces a fantastic panorama as you follow a single object along a static path. Further confusing things are the myriad Scene Modes which add filters and adjust white balance to suit a particular backdrop. You can shoot in at all times of the day, with Dawn, Sunset and Night modes, in addition to Beach/Snow, Party/Indoor, Fireworks and Fall Colours modes. There is even a Text mode for when you’re trying to turn words into memories.

The 2MP camera on the front delivers excellent, true depictions of your vain self, and with the proliferation of conferencing applications recently released, including Skype, Google Talk and Google+ Hangouts, it can actually be put to good use.

In terms of video capture, the 1080p results from the Galaxy S II line remain unrivalled by any device except Nokia’s N8, which still holds the quality crown. The SGS2X captures h.264-encoded .MP4 files, easily editable with most common software. While many OEMs claim their current high-end devices capture 1080p video at 30fps, the Galaxy S II line is the only one that actually looks like it does. We noticed no slowdown, no dropped frames, only perfect, enviable smoothness. The only thing we’d have liked to see is tap-to-focus in the UI itself, which both Apple and HTC can boast of their software. We found continuous autofocus to be a tad slow and unpredictable, often marring an otherwise perfect shot with a second or two of blurriness.

The Galaxy S II X, with its slightly wider and thicker frame, can get away with a beefier battery, and we get 200mAh extra to go along with an improved battery cover and .22” extra screen space.

What we get is a comparatively high-powered, long-lasting Android device. Though the phone generally lasted us most of the day without issue, there would be the occasional time that by 1pm the battery would be down to 25%, and that’s solely due to baseband chip needing more power to utilize the wider pipe. There is no way to we can tell to limit download speeds over 4G, so if you’re downloading large files, streaming lots of movies or photos you’ll notice the battery draining pretty fast. Offloading the bandwidth duties to WiFi, which seems counterintuitive, will do a lot to prolong the daily life of the phone.

That being said, we found the device, like its forebear, to last longer than most other Android devices, and it wasn’t uncommon to go to bed with 15% battery remaining. Unfortunately Samsung has seen fit to include a Battery Full vibration, which usually goes off an hour or two after going to sleep. There doesn’t seem any way to turn this off, barring editing sensitive system files or rooting the device and installing a custom ROM.

NFC, GPS, OMG

The NFCs are coming! The low-power RFID-like protocol being built into a growing minority of smartphones including the Nexus S and BlackBerry 9900 is meant to help transfer small amounts of data in close quarters. With Google Wallet just launched (not available yet in Canada), the service should grow amongst Android users but it maintains an esoteric and largely inaccessible “future-proof” feature.

Soon, when more devices and retailers are equipped with NFC, safe payment transactions such as paying for your meal or transferring money to a friend, can happen by merely tapping a console or bumping your phone with another. As it stands, there is a Tags application built into the device without much current value.

We’re happy to say that GPS works very well on the Galaxy S II X; we had no issues locking on, and staying connected to, a number of satellites. The large screen works great as a turn-by-turn navigation unit: all you need is a smartphone car mount.

WiFi and Bluetooth, as expected, work as expected and we had no trouble connecting our A2DP-enabled headset to the device for stereo music streaming.

Where It Needs Improvement

Samsung just brought word of the upcoming HD version of the Galaxy S II, which sports a 1280×720 pixel display and a 316PPI compared to a paltry 206PPI on the 800×480 Super AMOLED Plus display. As a result, text tends towards the larger size, even if it’s difficult to see any grain due to the excellent technology behind the display.

What we do know is that the next-generation of Galaxy S devices will have a higher-resolution display, and we’ve already seen the fruits of this on qHD devices like the Motorola Atrix and HTC Sensation. Yes, the Samsung’s screen looks better but fits far less than its higher-res peers.

We also found issue, as we did on the Bell version, with the sound quality coming out of the headphones and speaker on the Galaxy S II X. It has been widely noted that Samsung downgraded the Digital to Analog converter on the GS2 line, utilizing a cheaper Yamaha part over an excellent Wolfson Micro part on the original Galaxy S i9000. After using the Bell GS2 for many months, and the Telus version, I have grown used to the slightly lower fidelity audio coming out of the headphone jack, but that doesn’t mean to say I like it. Practically any other modern headphone jack, from the iPhone to any HTC device, sounds fuller, punchier and less noisy than that of the SGS2.

There are an excessive number of system applications running in the background on the SGS2X. Despite there being 1GB RAM under the hood, only 230MB are accessible to the user on first bootup. While there are essential services, such as media synchronization and background updates, that require a sizable amount of RAM, we’d have liked to see more available to the user for apps.

Hacking and Slashing

Even though the device has not been released yet, in a word: yes. With an unlocked bootloader and myriad developers chomping at the bit to develop their own piece of Android ROM history, the Samsung Galaxy S II X is sure to be a very active modders’ device. Add in the fact that this is the exact same model as the one being released on T-Mobile, and you’ve got a recipe for XDA-Developers success.

Just note that Samsung has added what they call a custom kernel counter to the Galaxy S II line. The moment you install a custom kernel, the count starts and your warranty is void. While there are ways around this, you’re on your own once you’re out in the wild. You’ve been warned.

Conclusions

The Telus Samsung Galaxy S II X. TSGSIIX. It’s coming at a very important time for the carrier, who needs a hit phone that will get people talking. Samsung currently has the most cultural cache amongst mainstream users after Apple. After hitting the 10 million sold mark, the Galaxy S II line is a clear hit, and this model is easily its most attractive version (though we haven’t seen the Sprint version, nor the upcoming LTE models for comparison).

As for performance, the rather tiny hit in synthetic benchmarks is a small price to pay for the extra bandwidth obtainable by utilizing Telus’ dual-channel HSPA+ abilities. And, like its future-LTE companions, the battery hit is more than welcome when instantly loading web pages and streaming high quality video over the cellular network.

More than the sum of its individual parts, the Galaxy S II X is one of the most attractive smartphones we’ve ever used. At no time did it feel oversized, clunky or in the way. Its greatest weakness — a relatively low resolution — is also one of its biggest strengths: the screen on this device is stunning.

As a business phone, it not only has the looks but the Exchange chops. If you’re dissatisfied with the stock apps, there are plenty of alternatives in the Android Marketplace, which has just been updated to include film rentals, most of which would look great streaming to the large screen.

While there are some problems with the device, they are mostly minor quibbles that will diminish as you get used to it. Samsung has bested itself, again, and we’re grateful they continue to do so.

Rating: 9/10

Pros: – Beautiful, vivid screen that does not pixellate or distort despite the large size – Excellent build quality, huge improvement over SGS2 – Battery cover is gorgeous and makes the phone easy to grip – Speed demon: excellent day-to-day software performance – Bandwidth demon: best HSPA+ scores we’ve ever seen – Camera is awesome, and the video results are fantastic: leave your P&S at home – NFC included (thanks?) – Battery life is better than average – Android 2.3.5 is smooth as butter – AWS compatibility means 3G with every GSM carrier in Canada

Cons: – High bandwidth activity eats battery – Headphone sound quality is not satisfactory for an expensive smartphone – Not quite as fast as SGS2 variant in most benchmarks – Disappointing amount of free RAM (lots of stuff in the background) – No notification LED

monsterduc1000

Fantastic!

Suresh in Waterloo.

BB9900 is leaps and bounds ahead of this laggy Android crap

John mack

TYPO “The HTC Hercules…” you mean Samsung Hercules

Baconeater

Anyone getting this to use on Wind or Mobilicity? Too bad this phone isn’t at least qhd…

bob

This is by far the best AWS phone on the Canadian market. I believe many people will want to use it on these networks.

patrickm

Sweet phone about time Telus

steve

Release date?

bob

Great review. Samsung’s display are very good. SAMOLED HD will be the best, Pentile or not.

Justin J

So would this work on Rogers if you unlocked it?

bob

Yes, just like the Bell version.

Mike E

I’m tired of waiting to upgrade, I should just get this…..but then the Nexus Prime could be just around the corner? Or not. I wonder if HD displays on these phones will slow them down noticeably, just watched a video of the Galaxy Note, probably running Exynos, and it had definite lag…probably from pushing 40% more pixels which is hard work on any processor. Trying to sell myself that I don’t need a Prime and this will do, maybe I’ll just do a 1 year or buy outright and sell if LTE and Prime look too awesome to pass over.

Mat888

I was hoping this will exceed the benchmarks set by other variants considering it is 1.5 Ghz. My excitement to upgrade is now a disappointment. I want to stay with Telus and dont want to switch to Rogers to have their LTE variant. Maybe I’ll just pass this time and wait a little more for Telus’s LTE version next year…maybe.

Danbo

“dubiously iPhone like”

I’m pretty tired of hearing reviewers saying this. You realize folders have been in android since version 1.5…

Its honestly like all reviewers of the SGS2 have never used an android phone before.

steven spenst

I am glad I bought the faster euro version with a 1.2 ghz

saffant

lol @ 2372 in quadrant.

Regardless, great review as always Daniel.

aka

didn’t a previous leaked benchmark show it can reach over 3000 in Quatrant? wonder why so low this time..might have to root the thing and get rid of Groupon and recheck the results..

Kari

Glad I didn’t wait and went with Bell. More time on a superior phone!

Chris

Release date? Next week?

PannTher

Shouldn’t it say 1850 for battery under specs instead of 1650?

Does it have front light notification?

Looks cool, but the new Exynos chip should be coming and it will be sooo fast! Hard to decide.

Souken

“Unfortunately Samsung has seen fit to include a Battery Full vibration, which usually goes off an hour or two after going to sleep. There doesn’t seem any way to turn this off, barring editing sensitive system files or rooting the device and installing a custom ROM.”

About that, I’ve never had that problem after I put the phone to Silent, which I do before heading to sleep. I know of the Battery Full vibration the reviewer speaks of as it was also featured in the Galaxy S Captivate and Bell’s Galaxy S II that I both have, and whenever I set the phone to Silent (with Vibration off as well), the phone doesn’t vibrate when fully charged. If anything, the screen just turns on but turns back off after a few seconds.

Unless the reviewer means that Samsung tweaked it so that the Battery Full vibration still happens even when Vibration is turned off? If so, that’s just a weird tweak by Samsung.

Daniel Bader

@Souken, you are correct in that the noise is silent in silent mode, but then so is everything else. Generally, I want to leave my phone on Vibrate when I go to sleep and not worry that I’m going to be woken up by anything other than a real notification, not some battery full indictor.

Ken

I’m not sure I understand the problem with a battery full vibration. Are people really so attached to their phones that they absolutely MUST have them in the room with them at all times, even when they are sleeping?

connor

I still think barely making it to the end of an average day is not acceptable in a smartphone. I would gladly giver up some extra size for a 2000mah + battery that will last more than a day

Gab

carry an extra batter?

Anthony

Does it have a notification light?

123

>Though the phone generally lasted us most of the day without issue

Are you seriously excited about a phone that doesn’t last even a day?!?!

I miss good old times with my 6310i charging once every 10 days.

Skrutor

Excellent review. I look forward to seeing how it compares to the upcoming Rogers variant.

Matt

Something seems very flawed with that current Quadrant benchmark, the tests mid-aug showed 3359, now it`s down 500 points. There`s something wrong with this. Perhaps someone should recheck this.

mike oxbig

Does anyone know yet if it saves battery power by throttling back the processor speed like the original SG2? It seems like it doesn’t from the review.

cole

Quad band HSPA? including AWS band? That’s huge! Is this the first phone to offer that? Can finally have a phone to go everywhere.

themirrorprince

no this isnt the first phone to offer that. Nokia has been using pentaband HSPA for their high end phones for a while now. Pentaband is true global 3g coverage, while quadband might have some problems in some countries in South America and Europe

Jerrik

Yea, I think I’m going to stick with my Galaxy S2 from Bell. The UI nor the performance of this device seems any different from Bell’s version. I’m just going to wait until the LTE versions come out.

paul

if you shut the back round apps down does it make more ram available then 230 mb that seems very low to me since it comes with 1024mb that almost 800 would be used by junk on the boot.

Steve

Awesome device, great review. Sticky this to the front page!

Noel

Nice detailed review. As one who is on Tmo…i am looking primarily at the new Nexus phone, then maybe Amaze 4G and the SGS2. One more thing..whats the title of the music used in ur review and by who? Ty

Red

“Disappointing amount of free RAM”

*Remember* Android is supposed to run with almost all it’s RAM in use.

GoingCrazyWaiting

How much is Telus selling it for? T-mobile is going for $529.99

Brandon

I expect SAMOLED+ on 4.5 inches to look as good as PenTile SAMOLED on 4 at the least, hopefully better.

Very disappointed about the headphone issue though. Going to need to get a PMP to run PowerAmp on…

Brad

My desire got over 6000 on that sunspider…

sam

To late as allways Telus waiting for Galaxy Nexes now.

Phil

I’m going to get this phone, I’ve had several BB before. Does this phone have a Phone Calls Only profile? Does it have a bedtime mode? ie.: when I plug it in between times that I program, it automatically sets it to a profile (PCO)that I set up?

Phil

also, will Ice cream sandwhich be available soon for the s2x?

David

Samsung announced a couple of days ago that the SGSII WILL get ICS in Q2 of 2012. Which is a long wait when you take a moment to think about what phones will be out in April-June of next year and have ICS as stock. On the upside, though, there’s always the root and ROM method of upgrading.

T

I just wanted to leave a quick note saying how I enjoy that you made a comment about the sound quality coming out of the headphone jack. I originally had the Bell SGSII but returned it due to the poor sound quality from the headphone jack. Hopefully the Nexus Prime remedies this fault as this is an otherwise fantastic phone.

Tom

Too bad Samsung built the NFC chip into the battery… meaning OEM replacement only if you want NFC.

Oliver

Do you know what is the model for the battery. Can’t seem to find any OEM accessories on ebay. Guess they’ll be coming soon.

David

It’s great to see that Telus is finally stepping up their game with respect to their phone line-up. I’ve been with them for six years and this is only the second phone, behind the OG HTC Desire, that I’ve pined for. Too bad it came a couple months after my buying the international unlocked version of the SGSII. I have to say though, that extra screen real estate, faster data speeds, and NFC tempt me very strongly to pick the SGSIIX up anyway.

PS – Great review.

kim

what is the model number of the international unlocked phone you bought. nhow does it differ from the telus sgs11x

Noah

Man why does Telus have to have such sh*t data plans?!?!

mike oxbig

In reading the review, I was surprised to see that my SGII didn’t come with the Groupon app. Not that I’m complaining I’m in Metro Vancouver, is it possible that it’s region specific, or am I just lucky?

dabigbubba

the camera sgs2x (all of them) has issues with low lights indoor/or cloudy conditions(search (the red dot is back) on androidforum too late for me its past my 2weeks telus return policy,cant use it for work (designer)samsung shame on you!

Craig

Did you ever figure out how to turn off the FULL BATTERY VIBRATION?? I have been woke up few hours after I go to bed with the annoying vibration indicator telling me that my phone is charged. What a useless feature. Please help.

Charles Lee

Hi, i might be getting this phone in june 2012. I was wondering if Telus is going to get the white colour for the Samsung Galaxy S2X?? I wish this phone has a white version too!! I live in Vancouver Canada and im with Telus!

Charles Lee

Will the Samsung Galaxy S2X have a lower price for telus?? For a 3 year contract?? Like half the price of $99.99??

mark

amazing phone got it the day it came out, no problems. got rid of my blackberry that always crashed and froze on me!

Steve

This is an incredible phone. The only thing that I miss is an led notification indicator. The audio through the earpiece of my S2X in muffled. Anyone else experiencing this?

Squrl

Yes I am experiencing the muffled ear piece. I exclusivly use the head phones that came with it. I couldn’t get the otterbox for it for 2 months, now it is in shop because the screen is messed(little 3′ drop). I had to go back to my Motorola Defy. I noticed that the Defy has a built in FM reciever, does the Galaxy S2X?